Calendario

One of the twelve Gopals in Krishna lila was named Kusumasava. He
appeared in Gaura-lila as Sridhara Pandit, who was given the nickname khola-beca, “bark-seller.”

Sridhara Pandit was a resident of Nabadwip. Nabadwip is composed of
nine islands, of which the central island is known as Antardvipa. He
used to live at the northern extremity of Mayapur and to the southeast
of the Chand Kazi’s samadhi, in the place that now goes by the name of
Sridhara Angan.

During his lifetime, it was a banana orchard, which
nowadays is no longer the case, at least not to our mortal eyes. During
this incarnation, Sridhara played the role of a poor Brahmin who made
his living selling the produce of his banana garden. In order to keep
the memory of Sridhara Pandit alive, the founder of the world-wide
Chaitanya and Gaudiya Maths, Nitya-lila-pravishta Om Vishnupada Srila
Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Goswami Prabhupada, discovered and revealed
this site of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu’s pastimes. Deity worship was
established there and it continued until after Srila Bhaktisiddhanta
Saraswati Goswami Thakur’s disappearance. Now, because of problems with
local people, the place is once again losing its beauty. Even so, during
the Nabadwip parikrama, devotees still pay their obeisances at that
spot to the memory of Sridhara Pandit.

Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur has written as follows in his
Nabadvipa-dhama-mahatmya: “Sridhara Pandit’s home comes after the
weavers’ neighborhood. Gauranga Mahaprabhu ended the kirtan there.”
Nityananda Prabhu says the following to Jiva Goswami:

“Out of his mercy, Mahaprabhu Gauranga Hari would end the kirtan here
so that the devotees could rest. It is therefore known as
vishrama-sthana, or the Lord’s place of rest. So let us also repose a
while here at the house of Sridhara Pandit.”
(Nabadwip-dhama-mahatmya)

According to this same book, there was previously a large tank near
Sridhara’s banana orchard, but this too is no longer visible.